Vollkornbrot
- 2 cups (13 ounces) whole rye berries
- 8 cups (64 fl. ounces) boiling spring water
- 2 cups (18 ounces) rye sourdough starter
- 8 cups (40 ounces) medium ground rye flour
- 2 cups (9 ounces) cracked rye
- 1 tablespoon (3/4 ounce) fine sea salt
- Soak the rye berries in about 6 cups of the hot spring water, or at least enough to cover berries by 1-inch.
- Let stand 8 hours or overnight (if the water becomes completely absorbed before soaking time has ended, add more hot spring water to cover).
- Drain and reserve the soaking liquid.
- Add enough fresh room-temperature spring water to the reserved soaking liquid to measure 6 cups total.
- Reserve.
- Combine the starter, rye berries and reserved 6 cups water in a 6-quart bowl.
- Break up the starter well with a wooden spoon and stir until it loosens and the mixture is slightly frothy.
- Add 1 cup (5 1/2 ounces) of the rye flour and all the cracked rye.
- Stir well until combined.
- Add the salt and remaining flour.
- Stir until combined and the mixture is wet and sticky.
- Take the dough's temperature -- the ideal is 78 degrees.
- Cover with a clean damp towel and put in a moderately warm (74 to 80 degrees) draft-free place.
- Note: If the dough temperature is higher than 78 degrees put it in a cooler than 78 degree place, like the refrigerator, until the dough cools to 78 degrees.
- If it is lower than 78 degrees, put it in a warmer than 78 degree place until the dough warms to 78 degrees.
- The point is to try to keep the dough at 78 degrees during its fermentation.
- If you have to move the dough, be gentle and don't jostle it, or the dough might deflate.
- The dough will become spongy but not springy, distinctly sour-smelling and increased in volume by about 1/4.
- Generously grease 2 (5 by 9 by 3-inch) loaf pans with vegetable shortening and dust with rye flour.
- Turn the dough into the prepared pans.
- Smooth the tops with a wet thin flexible cake spatula.
- Cover the loaves with a clean damp towel or plastic wrap and put in a moderately warm (74 to 80 degree) draft free place until the dough has domed slightly and increased in volume again by 1/4.
- Bake on center rack of a preheated 300 degree oven until the loaves have shrunk from the sides of the pan and the tops are dark brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, about 2 1/2 to 3 hours.
- Remove the loaves from the pans and hold the loaves upside down.
- Strike the bottoms firmly with your finger.
- If the sound is hollow, the breads are done.
- If it doesn't sound hollow, bake 15 minutes longer.
- Cool the pans for 10 minutes, then remove and cool completely on wire racks.
- Let the bread rest 24 to 36 hours before eating.
- It is very moist in the center when removed from oven, but as it cools the moisture distributes evenly throughout the bread.
- It will keep for weeks at room temperature wrapped tightly in plastic wrap.
whole rye berries, boiling spring water, starter, ground rye flour, cracked rye, salt
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/vollkornbrot-recipe.html (may not work)